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Books > Humanities > Religion & beliefs > Christianity > Orthodox Churches
Severus of Antioch is by far the most prolific and well known
theologian of the non-Chalcedonian churches. Although his life and
writings came to our knowledge in Syriac, gaining him the title
"Crown of the Syriac Literature," many texts relating to his life
and works survived in the Coptic and Copto-Arabic tradition, as
well as a number of other texts that were traditionally attributed
to him. This book provides an analysis of these texts as well as a
discussion of the veneration of Severus of Antioch in the Coptic
Church.
Am Beispiel der Initiationssakramente (Taufe, Firmung,
Eucharistiefeier) und der Priesterweihe wird einerseits die
Konsekration der Materie (Wasser, Myronoel, Brot und Wein) und des
Empfangers dargestellt, anderseits das Konsekrationsgeschehen der
einzelnen liturgischen Vollzuge nach der syrisch antiochenischen
Liturgie miteinander verglichen, analysiert und kommentiert.
This book explores the changes underwent by the Orthodox Churches
of Eastern and Southeastern Europe as they came into contact with
modernity. The movements of religious renewal among Orthodox
believers appeared almost simultaneously in different areas of
Eastern Europe at the end of the nineteenth and during the first
decades of the twentieth century. This volume examines what could
be defined as renewal movement in Eastern Orthodox traditions. Some
case studies include the God Worshippers in Serbia, religious
fraternities in Bulgaria, the Zoe movement in Greece, the
evangelical movement among Romanian Orthodox believers known as
Oastea Domnului (The Lord's Army), the Doukhobors in Russia, and
the Maliovantsy in Ukraine. This volume provides a new
understanding of processes of change in the spiritual landscape of
Orthodox Christianity and various influences such as other
non-Orthodox traditions, charismatic leaders, new religious
practices and rituals.
This is the standard edition of the chronicle of Bar Hebraeus in
Syriac and English translation. It gives the political history of
the world from the creation to the year AD 1286.
There are saints in Orthodox Christian culture who overturn the
conventional concept of sainthood. Their conduct may be unruly and
salacious, they may blaspheme and even kill - yet, mysteriously,
those around them treat them with even more reverence. Such saints
are called 'holy fools'. In this pioneering study Sergey A. Ivanov
examines the phenomenon of holy foolery from a cultural standpoint.
He identifies its prerequisites and its development in religious
thought, and traces the emergence of the first hagiographic texts
describing these paradoxical saints. He describes the beginnings of
holy foolery in Egyptian monasteries of the fifth century, followed
by its high point in the cities of Byzantium, with an eventual
decline in the twelfth to fourteenth centuries. He also compares
the important Russian tradition of holy fools, which in some form
has survived to this day.
Here is the book that converted C. S. Lewis from atheism to
Christianity. This history of mankind, Christ, and Christianity is
to some extent a conscious rebuttal of H. G. Wells' Outline of
History, which embraced both the evolutionary origins of humanity
and the mortal humanity of Jesus. Whereas Orthodoxy detailed
Chesterton's own spiritual journey, this book illustrates the
spiritual journey of humanity, or at least of Western civilization.
A book for both mind and spirit.
The Asketikon of St Basil the Great comprises a new English
translation and studies which re-examine the emergence of
monasticism in Asia Minor. The Regula Basilii, translated by
Rufinus from Basil's Small Asketikon, is closely compared with the
Greek text of the longer edition, as a means to tracing the
development of ideas. Silvas concludes that the antecedents of the
monastic community of the Great Asketikon are best sought not in
some kind of sub-orthodox modus vivendi of male and female ascetics
living together and increasingly curbed by an emerging neo-Nicene
orthodoxy less favourable to women ('homoiousian asceticism'), but
in the local domestic ascetic movement in Anatolia as typified in
the developments at Annisa under the leadership of Makrina.
This book is a classic in the history of the Oriental Churches,
which are sometimes portrayed as heretical in general church
history books, if mentioned at all. Written by a Copt, it portrays
the history of the faith of these non-Chalcedonian Churches with
first-hand knowledge of their traditions. The author covers
Alexandrine Christianity (the Copts and the Ethiopians), the Church
of Antioch (Syriac Orthodox), the "Nestorian" Church of the East,
the Armenian Church, the St. Thomas Christians of South India, the
Maronite Church, as well as the Vanished Churches of Carthage,
Pentapolis, and Nubia.
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For the Unity of All
(Hardcover)
John Panteleimon Manoussakis; Foreword by Patriarch Bartholomew
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R879
R757
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What were the historical and cultural processes by which Cyril of
Alexandria was elevated to canonical status while his opponent,
Nestorius, bishop of Constantinople, was made into a heretic? In
contrast to previous scholarship, Susan Wessel concludes that
Cyril's success in being elevated to orthodox status was not simply
a political accomplishment based on political alliances he had
fashioned as opportunity arose. Nor was it a dogmatic victory,
based on the clarity and orthodoxy of Cyril's doctrinal claims.
Instead, it was his strategy in identifying himself with the
orthodoxy of the former bishop of Alexandria, Athanasius, in his
victory over Arianism, in borrowing Athanasius' interpretive
methods, and in skilfully using the tropes and figures of the
second sophistic that made Cyril a saint in the Greek and Coptic
Orthodox Churches.
This book explores the Romanian Orthodox Church's arguments on
national identity to legitimize its own place in a post-communist
Romania. The work traces the clergy's deployment of the concepts of
Christian Orthodoxy and Latin legacy as part of an uncharted
constellation of arguments in contemporary intellectual history. A
survey of public intellectuals' opinions on national identity
complements the Church's views. The investigation attempts to offer
an insight into the Church's efforts to re-assert itself, given
free rein in a post-dictatorial world of accelerated modernization.
After clarifying and surveying the Church's claims on institutional
and national identity, the book then also explores the secular
ideas on the subject. The subsequent analysis treats this material
as "speech acts" (statements doing, not only saying, something)
which are occasionally out of sync. Against a background of
secularization, the Church's rhetoric articulates a distinct line
of thought in the post-89 intellectual landscape.
The History of the Za'faran Monastery is for the first time offered
in English translation to the readers. It was written in 1917 by
Patriarch Ignatius Aphram Barsoum (d. 1957) when he was still a
monk at the monastery. The book details the history of the
monastery from its inception until modern times. It deals with with
everything, from construction to its significance as a center of
Syriac learning and learned men. Without this small book, the first
of its kind, a great and significant page of the history of the
Syrian Church of Antioch would have been lamentably lost.
For a millennium and a half, Christianity in China has been
perceived as a foreign religion for a foreign people. Yet in the
last hundred years, various attempts to articulate a Chinese
Christianity have been made by indigenous leaders like Watchman
Nee, T. C. Chao and K. H. Ting. This book examines these and other
historical approaches, and highlights their tendencies to draw from
Western or Latin forms of Christian theology. Alexander Chow is
sensitive to the ideological resources of China's past and present,
and shows the potential role of Eastern Orthodox theology in
today's development of an authentic Chinese contextual theology.
This is the first modern study in English of the life and thought of the ninth-century Byzantine theologian and monastic reformer, Theodore the Stoudite. Cholij analyses Theodore's letters and religious writings in context in order to reach new conclusions concerning the religious and secular issues which engaged him in controversy. This analysis develops a new definition of the origins of the Orthodox sacramental tradition.
This new political history of the Orthodox Church in the Ottoman
Empire explains why Orthodoxy became the subject of acute political
competition between the Great Powers during the mid 19th century.
It also explores how such rivalries led, paradoxically, both to
secularizing reforms and to Europe's last great war of religion -
the Crimean War.
The Russian Orthodox Church has survived more than seventy years of
the most brutal and sustained attempts to eradicate religion that
has ever been. Weakened but spiritually alive, it is confronted by
the demands of a ravaged, exhausted society. Can it, however, find
the resources and energy to respond to these demands? Jane Ellis
describes the developments and problems in the Russian Orthodox
Church under glasnost and especially since the new freedoms were
granted following the millennium celebrations of 1988. New
opportunities mean new challenges and demand huge new resources.
Old problems in the form of close State and KGB contacts remain,
and new problems in the form of competition from other
denominations and sects arise. Traditionally the Orthodox Church
has enjoyed a 'symphony' with the State. However are unhealthy
links with the KGB and the communist past still damaging the
Church. Is it in danger of becoming a state church?
The Syriac writers of Qatar themselves produced some of the best
and most sophisticated writing to be found in all Syriac literature
of the seventh century, but they have not received the scholarly
attention that they deserve in the last half century. This volume
seeks to redress this underdevelopment by setting the standard for
further research in the sub-field of Beth Qatraye studies.
The Orthodox Christian thought is the most modally rigorous way of
inferring. The subject of the book is to investigate possibilities
of explicating the Orthodox thought from the viewpoint of analytic
philosophy and symbolic logic. The claim that Orthodox thinking is
just mystic and illogical is not true. The logical culture of
Orthodox Christian thinking is unknown and ununderstandable for the
West, although its schemata are very influential in Eastern Europe
till now (Marxism-Leninism is just one of their possible
instances). This thought can be called totalistic or even
totalitarian. For this thought any truth or falsity is necessary.
As a result, the whole world is presented as logical and nomothetic
and there is no place for contingency.
The Ukrainian Cossacks became famous as ferocious warriors, their fighting skills developed in their religious wars against the Tartars, Turks, Poles, and Russians. In this pioneering study, Serhii Plokhy examines the confessionalization of religious life in the early modern period, and shows how Cossack involvement in the religious struggle between Eastern Orthodoxy and Roman Catholicism helped shape not only Ukrainian but also Russian and Polish cultural identities.
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